• ‘Lego is one of those things that everyone has experience of... They already have a relationship with that object.' N.Smith...

    ‘Lego is one of those things that everyone has experience of... They already have a relationship with that object.'

    N.Smith Gallery is delighted to present five iconic Lego works by Claire Healy & Sean Cordeiro via our new online program which offers singular or small bodies of work by the gallery's artists.

     

    Reach for the Sky includes Lego wall sculptures that emulate TV images of the Challenger space shuttle explosion.

     

    'It was one of those memories where you think you remember,' said Cordiero, who was in school at the time, watching from several time zones away. 'I couldn’t have been at school, but I remember being at school.'

     

    Cordiero and Healy used Lego to make sense of the event that played tricks on their minds since childhood. The tragedy killed all seven crew members, including teacher Christa McAuliffe. Inspired by McAuliffe, who was supposed to teach children from space, the artists decided to use Legos to depict the tragedy.

     

    In essence, the works are a meditation on mortality. 

     

    Please contact the gallery for a list of available works.

  • Claire Healy & Sean Cordeiro T+85_red&blue_diptych, 2013 recontextualised lego 113 x 298 x 3 cm
    Claire Healy & Sean Cordeiro
    T+85_red&blue_diptych, 2013
    recontextualised lego
    113 x 298 x 3 cm
     
  • 'We've used pre-loved Lego because there's a particular nostalgia...'

    • Claire Healy & Sean Cordeiro T+85_red, 2013 recontextualised Lego 117 x 123 x 3 cm
      Claire Healy & Sean Cordeiro
      T+85_red, 2013
      recontextualised Lego
      117 x 123 x 3 cm
    • Claire Healy & Sean Cordeiro T+85 White & Orange, 2014 recontextualised Lego 120 x 125 x 3 cm
      Claire Healy & Sean Cordeiro
      T+85 White & Orange, 2014
      recontextualised Lego
      120 x 125 x 3 cm
  • Claire Healy & Sean Cordeiro T+77_brown&red, 2013 recontextualised Lego 79 x 137 x 3 cm
    Claire Healy & Sean Cordeiro
    T+77_brown&red, 2013
    recontextualised Lego
    79 x 137 x 3 cm
  • Claire Healy & Sean Cordeiro T+79_yellow, 2011 recontextualised lego 160 x 70 x 3 cm
    Claire Healy & Sean Cordeiro
    T+79_yellow, 2011
    recontextualised lego
    160 x 70 x 3 cm
  • Reach for the Sky.

    This body of work began during a residency at the Akiyoshidai International Artist Village, Japan in early 2010, and has continued as further studies over the years. In essence, the work is a meditation on mortality. What better place to meditate upon mortality than Japan: A nation famous for both Harakiri and having the longest lifespan in the world- oddly opposing phenomena.

     

    “To say that dying without reaching one's aim is to die a dog's death is the frivolous way of sophisticates. When pressed with the choice of life or death, it is not necessary to gain one's aim.

     

    We all want to live. And in large part we make our logic according to what we like. But not having attained our aim and continuing to live is cowardice. This is a thin dangerous line. To die without gaining one's aim is a dog's death and fanaticism. But there is no shame in this. This is the substance of the Way of the Samurai.”

                            -Hagakure: The Way of the Samurai by Yamamoto Tsunetomo

     

    Children freely explore notions of life and death through play and through story telling (how many children’s stories end with ‘and then I died’). It is in adult life that we grow more reticent about death and destruction. So when the space shuttle Challenger blew up in front of the children of the world’s eyes, it was perhaps the adult world that was more shocked. 

     

    Paul Virilio coined the term, the Integral Accident

    “To invent the sailing ship or steamer is to invent the shipwreck.

    To invent the train is to invent the rail accident of derailment

    To invent the family automobile is to produce the pile-up on the highway

    To get what is heavier than air to take off in the form of an aeroplane or dirigible is to invent the crash- the air disaster. 

    As for the space shuttle, Challenger, its blowing up in flight in the same year as the tragedy of Chernobyl occurred is the original accident of a new motor, the equivalent of the first shipwreck of the very first ship.”

     

    But perhaps the concept of the Integral Accident is not as revolutionary as it sounds to a child who plays with Lego too much- in the hands of such a child, buildings and vehicles are endlessly created and destroyed. The Lego model is created in the certain knowledge that it will be destroyed in the not too distant future.

     

    Many of our past works have been concerned with deconstruction: analysing the matter of an object through the deconstitution of its original shape and subsequent reconstitution into a different form. We are interested in Lego because it is an analogue of the modern house brick: stackable and able to be tessellated, thereby creating strong structures. The Lego brick, unlike its architectural counter-part has the element of changeability and movement integral within its design.

     

    The material desires of children are explored through their play with Lego: houses built, spacecraft fashioned into and of course smashed apart and rebuilt again.

     

    We feel that the ‘Challenger’ disaster was a significant historical event for our generation.

  • Bio.

    Bio.

    Working as a collaborative duo since 2001, Claire Healy & Sean Cordeiro’s practice reflects a preoccupation with the dynamics of global mobility, fallout of consumer society, and contemporary notion of home.

    Combining a playful sense of humour and an engagement with art historical precedents, the duo's work is characterised by the deconstruction and reinvention of prefabricated structures and objects into extraordinary sculptures and installations. Readymade materials often feature in their work, including Lego, Ikea furniture, car and aircraft parts, dinosaur bones, and reconfigured architectural structures.

    Claire & Sean won the Sulman Prize in 2022, and have had numerous survey exhibitions in Australia and internationally. The duo’s installation Life Span was included in Australia’s representation at the 53rd Venice Biennale, and the duo have been included in the Auckland Triennial (2013), the Australian Biennial of Art (2018), and Oku-Noto Triennale, Japan (2021). Recent solo exhibitions include Post-Haste (2021-22), Blue Mountains Cultural Centre; Claire Healy and Sean Cordeiro (2012-13), Museum of Contemporary Art, Sydney, and UQ Art Museum, Brisbane; Are we there Yet? (2011), Corcoran Gallery, Washington DC; REMS at La bf15 (2009), Lyon; The Paper Trail (2007), Art Gallery of New South Wales; and flatpack (2006) Künstlerhaus Bethanien, Berlin.

     

    Request available works / Join Claire & Sean's preview list.